<p>While looking on the internet, I came upon the REA website that stated that, in order to get a 5 on the AP Environmental Exam, one must get a raw score of at least 120 out of 160.
IS THAT TRUE?
I was shocked when I looked at and thought that getting such a high score is extremely difficulty. For the 2003 Test, you needed only 90 points.
Is the REA website correct?
If not, does anyone knoew the real approximate curve(I know it changes year to year), for the AP Environmental Science exam?</p>
<p>According to Barrons you only need a 60% on the test to pass with a 5.</p>
<p>No way!!!
I hope Barron’s is right. I’m taking the late test tommorow(20th). Hopefully I can pull off a 5.
If the real curve is the REA curve, I’m probably going to cancel my score!</p>
<p>^ what’s the REA curve?</p>
<p>I would not imagine either book is right. Something around the 90 from 2003 should be right, though I think the degree of difficulty for this year was a little lower. The numbers for most exams change only slightly year after year and there have been no critical changes to this exam that I can think of. Taking the Barron’s tests for Environmental Science, though, 60% probably should be a five…</p>
<p>my teacher also said about 60% correct (that might have been 60 points after deductions) and he was referring to the MC</p>
<p>I’m certainly hoping that the curve is LOW!
But i read somewhere that the stats for last year for people who got 5s is 10%! 10% ONLY? I thought Enviro was suppose to be one of the easier exams!</p>
<p>Sometimes the exams are easy but the curve sucks…</p>